Here is a major research project that is peopling the Indian Ocean with prehistoric seafarers exchanging native crops and stock between Africa and India. Not the least exciting part of the work is the authors’ contention that the prime movers of this maritime adventurewere not the great empires but a multitude of small-scale entrepreneurs
Environmental histories of plant exchanges have largely centred on their eco- nomic importance in in...
This thesis casts a new light on the role of Southeast Asia in the ancient Indian Ocean World. It br...
In the millennium after 300 BC, the western Indian Ocean emerged as a main hub of Old World exchange...
Les plantes cultivées, les mauvaises herbes, les bovins et les animaux commensaux ont tous été trans...
The Indian Ocean represents one of the oldest exchange networks connecting South-East-Asia with Indi...
In recent decades, the vast and culturally diverse Indian Ocean region has increasingly attracted th...
Much of the environmental history literature on plant transfers has centred on European agency and o...
This book tracks the progress of the prehistoric influx of population into the Pacific region, the l...
Like the Mediterranean, the Indian Ocean has been a privileged site of cross-cultural contact since ...
In his 1959 book, Africa: Its Peoples and Their Culture History, George P. Murdock suggested that a ...
In this Introduction we comment on issues raised by the present collection of papers as they appear ...
In the areas adjacent to the drowned Pleistocene continent of Sunda - present-day Mainland and Islan...
This paper aims to open up a cultural studies conversation on the Indian Ocean. Knowledge of the Ind...
Page range: 59-96This paper addresses the question of why the prehistoric Indonesian colonization of...
The human-abetted introduction of commensal species (i.e. those that opportunistically exploit the a...
Environmental histories of plant exchanges have largely centred on their eco- nomic importance in in...
This thesis casts a new light on the role of Southeast Asia in the ancient Indian Ocean World. It br...
In the millennium after 300 BC, the western Indian Ocean emerged as a main hub of Old World exchange...
Les plantes cultivées, les mauvaises herbes, les bovins et les animaux commensaux ont tous été trans...
The Indian Ocean represents one of the oldest exchange networks connecting South-East-Asia with Indi...
In recent decades, the vast and culturally diverse Indian Ocean region has increasingly attracted th...
Much of the environmental history literature on plant transfers has centred on European agency and o...
This book tracks the progress of the prehistoric influx of population into the Pacific region, the l...
Like the Mediterranean, the Indian Ocean has been a privileged site of cross-cultural contact since ...
In his 1959 book, Africa: Its Peoples and Their Culture History, George P. Murdock suggested that a ...
In this Introduction we comment on issues raised by the present collection of papers as they appear ...
In the areas adjacent to the drowned Pleistocene continent of Sunda - present-day Mainland and Islan...
This paper aims to open up a cultural studies conversation on the Indian Ocean. Knowledge of the Ind...
Page range: 59-96This paper addresses the question of why the prehistoric Indonesian colonization of...
The human-abetted introduction of commensal species (i.e. those that opportunistically exploit the a...
Environmental histories of plant exchanges have largely centred on their eco- nomic importance in in...
This thesis casts a new light on the role of Southeast Asia in the ancient Indian Ocean World. It br...
In the millennium after 300 BC, the western Indian Ocean emerged as a main hub of Old World exchange...